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Car Seat Safety
Safe Kids Safety Tips
Selecting and Using the Most Appropriate Car
Safety Seats for Growing Children.
Despite laws in all states requiring the use of car safety
seats or child restraint devices for young children, many children continue to be killed
each year while riding in motor vehicles.
In 1994 alone, 673 children younger than 5 years of age
died while riding in motor vehicles; 362 were unrestrained, and many more were restrained
improperly.
MAJOR NEW AMERICAN ACADEMY OF
PEDIATRICS RECOMMENDATIONS
- Children should face the rear of the
vehicle until they are at least 20 lb and 1 year of age to reduce the
risk of cervical spine injury in the event of a crash. Infants who
weigh 20 lb before 1 year of age should ride rear facing in a
convertible seat or infant seat approved for higher weights until 1
year of age.
- A rear-facing car safety seat must not be placed in the
front passenger seat of any vehicle equipped with a passenger-side front air bag. This
practice would prevent the risk of death or serious injury from impact of the air bag
against the safety seat.
- Premature and small infants should not
be placed in car safety seats with shields, abdominal pads, or arm
rests that could directly contact an infant's face and neck during an
impact.
- In rear-facing car safety seats for
infants, shoulder straps must be in the lowest slots until the
infant's shoulders are above the slots; the harness must be snug; and
the car safety seat's retainer clip should be positioned at the
midpoint of the infant's chest, not on the abdomen or in the neck
area.
- If the vehicle seat slopes so that the
infant's head flops forward, the car safety seat should be reclined
halfway back, at a 45deg. tilt. Until engineering modifications can be
implemented to prevent this problem, a firm roll of cloth or newspaper
can be wedged under the car safety seat below the infant's feet to
achieve this angle.
- A convertible safety seat, which is positioned reclined
and rear facing for a child until 1 year of age and 20 lb and semi
upright and forward
facing for a child older than 1 year of age who weighs 20 to 40 lb, should be used as long
as the child fits well (e.g. ears below the top of the back of the seat and shoulders below
the seat strap slots).
- A booster seat should be used when the
child has outgrown a convertible safety seat but is too small to fit
properly in a vehicle safety belt.
- There are two types of booster seats.
A belt-positioning booster seat that uses a combination lap/shoulder
belt, if that type of belt is available, is preferable to a booster
seat with a small shield, which can be used when only a lap belt is
available.
Companies across the United States have responded to the
problem of incompatibility of older children and seat belts by designing after-market
add-on devices that attempt to make the shoulder portion of the safety belt fit correctly,
thereby giving better protection to passengers who are not tall, notably children and some
adults. These products vary in design, yet all claim to solve the problem of poorly
fitting shoulder harnesses. However, some of these products actually seem to interfere
with proper lap and shoulder harness fit by positioning the lap belt too high on the
abdomen and the shoulder harness too low across the shoulder and by allowing too much
slack in the shoulder harness. Although in some cases these products may help shoulder
harnesses fit as they were designed, the add-on products are usually tested only by their
manufacturers, which allows manufacturers to make claims that cannot be substantiated by
independent means.
- Many new vehicles are equipped with integrated child
safety seats that are designed for children who weigh at least 20 lb and are at least 1
year of age. All infants younger than 1 year of age or who weigh less than 20 lb should be
positioned rear facing in separate child safety seats.
- Instruct parents to read the vehicle
owner's manual and child restraint device instructions carefully and
to test the car safety seat for a safe, snug fit in the vehicle to
avoid potentially life-threatening incompatibility problems between
the design of the car safety seat, vehicle seat, and seat belt system.
- Advise parents that the rear vehicle
seat is the safest place for children of any age to ride. Any
front-seat, front-facing passengers should ride properly restrained
and positioned as far back as possible from the passenger-side front
air bag. An infant should never be left unattended in a car
safety seat.
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